Microbiology Fundamentals: A Clinical Approach
3rd Edition
ISBN: 9781259709227
Author: Marjorie Kelly Cowan Professor, Heidi Smith
Publisher: McGraw-Hill Education
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Textbook Question
Chapter 6, Problem 12Q
In binary fission, the parent chromosome is duplicated so that the two daughter cells each have the same copy of the original chromosome. If this is the case, speculate on what happened to allow bacteria to become diversified into so many types?
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Chapter 6 Solutions
Microbiology Fundamentals: A Clinical Approach
Ch. 6.1 - List the essential nutrients of a bacterial cell.Ch. 6.1 - Prob. 2AYPCh. 6.1 - List and define four different terms that describe...Ch. 6.1 - Prob. 4AYPCh. 6.1 - Compare and contrast the processes of diffusion...Ch. 6.1 - Identify the effects of isotonic, hypotonic, and...Ch. 6.1 - Name two types of passive transport and one type...Ch. 6.1 - Prob. 1NPCh. 6.1 - Prob. 2NPCh. 6.1 - Prob. 3NP
Ch. 6.1 - Prob. 1MMCh. 6.2 - List and define five terms used to express the...Ch. 6.2 - Summarize three ways in which microorganisms...Ch. 6.2 - Identify three important environmental factors...Ch. 6.2 - List and describe the five types of associations...Ch. 6.2 - Discuss characteristics of biofilms that...Ch. 6.2 - Which statements are true with respect to...Ch. 6.3 - Summarize the steps of cell division used by most...Ch. 6.3 - Define doubling time, and describe how it leads to...Ch. 6.3 - Compare and contrast the four phases of growth in...Ch. 6.3 - Identify one culture-based and one...Ch. 6.3 - Prob. 2MMCh. 6 - Which descriptors are likely to have applied to...Ch. 6 - Prob. 2QCh. 6 - Speculate about how earths atmosphere came to...Ch. 6 - Which of the following is true of passive...Ch. 6 - Compare the effects of a hypertonic, hypotonic,...Ch. 6 - Usually scientists looking for life on other...Ch. 6 - An organism that can synthesize all its required...Ch. 6 - Provide evidence in support of or refuting this...Ch. 6 - Develop an explanation for why biofilm bacteria...Ch. 6 - Most bacteria increase their numbers by a. sexual...Ch. 6 - Looking at figure 6.3, explain how a cell in a...Ch. 6 - In binary fission, the parent chromosome is...Ch. 6 - A cell exposed to a hypertonic environment will...Ch. 6 - Prob. 14QCh. 6 - Bacteria and archaea are ubiquitous on the planet....Ch. 6 - Prob. 16QCh. 6 - How can you explain the fact that an unopened...Ch. 6 - Prob. 18QCh. 6 - In a viable count, each ____ represents a ______...Ch. 6 - If an egg salad sandwich sitting in a car on a...Ch. 6 - Scientists now believe that most bacteria in...Ch. 6 - Prob. 1VC
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- Some bacteria have a tube which allows materials to move directly into or out of the cytoplasm. This tube is called a ___. cilium flagellum genera pilusarrow_forwardWhat is meant by the term "streptobacillus"? a-bacteria that are rods and arranged in grapelike clusters b-bacteria that are round and arranged in chains c-special bacteria that are spiral-shaped d-bacteria that are rods and in chainsarrow_forwardSelect a statement that is not correct about bacterial fimbriae? A. they protect the cell from dehydration B. they are called attachment pili to distinguish them from the pili used to transfer DNA during conjugation C. they are used to attach the cell to its substrate or to other prokaryote D. they are hair-like projections that aid in attachment.arrow_forward
- Figure 13.6 Which of the following statements is true? a. Gram-positive bacteria have a single cell wall formed from peptidoglycan. b. Gram-positive bacteria have an outer membrane. c. The cell wall of Gram-negative bacteria is thick, and the cell wall of Gram-positive bacteria is thin. d. Gram-negative bacteria have a cell wall made of peptidoglycan, while Gram-positive bacteria have a cell wall made of phospholipids.arrow_forwardSome groups of bacteria can go dormant during periods of environmental stress through the formation of _______. A) magnetosomes B) peptidoglycan C) endospores D) piliarrow_forwardNuclear matter without envelope occurs in A Bacteria and Green Algae B Bacteria and Cyanobacteria C Cyanobacteria and Red Algae D Mycoplasma and Green Algaearrow_forward
- If you do not see single colonies on some of the plates, explain what might have happened to the bacteria?arrow_forwardA scientist isolates a new species of prokaryote. He notes that the specimen is a bacillus with a lipid bilayer and cell wall that stains positive for peptidoglycan. Its circular chromosome replicates from a single origin of replication. Is the specimen most likely an Archaea, a Gram-positive bacterium, or a Gram-negative bacterium? How do you know?arrow_forwardCompare and contrast bacteria living in extreme environmental conditions and bacteria living in “normal” environmental conditions.arrow_forward
- Why do microbiologists believe that the Archaea were the type of microbes from which all other life descended?arrow_forwardare these found in eukaryotes, prokaryotes or both? 1. nucleus 2. cell membrane 3. inclusion bodies 4. cell wall 5. peptidoglycan 6. genome 7. endoplamis reticulum 8. chloroplastsarrow_forwardWhy do many bacteria grow over a wide range of temperature?arrow_forward
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